Predictably Irrational: The Hidden Forces That Shape Our Decisions by Dan Ariely, Simon Jones (Narrated by), Simon Jones (Read by)

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(Compact Disc - Unabridged, 6 CD, 7hr. 30 min.)

Average Customer Rating: Customer Rating for this product is 4 out of 5 (6 ratings)

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  • Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
  • Pub. Date: February 2008
  • ISBN-13: 9780061457852
  • Sales Rank: 17,264
  • Edition Description: Unabridged, 6 CD, 7hr. 30 min.
 
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The Barnes & Noble Review

A few years ago, Dan Ariely, an economist at MIT, noted something odd in the subscription rates for the British newsmagazine The Economist. You could take the first option, costing $59, and get a year of full access to their web site. The second, costing $125, would get you a year-long print subscription. And the last, also costing $125, would get you a year of both the print subscription and the online access.

Huh?

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Synopsis

A challenging mate to Freakonomics, Predictably Irrational examines how the world often works according to principles of irrationality in the places where we least expect it.

Do you know why you still have a headache after taking a one-cent aspirin, but why that same headache disappears if the aspirin costs fifty cents? Do you know why recalling the Ten Commandments reduces people’s tendency to lie, or why honor codes are actually effective in reducing dishonesty at the workplace? Do you know why, after doing careful and extensive research on which car to buy, a random meeting with someone who had an awful experience with that car changes your decision? Why do we make decisions contrary to our better judgment? What is “better judgment?”

Predictably Irrational challenges us to ponder these questions (questions we sometimes avoid) and demonstrates how irrationality manifests itself in situations (often very peculiar and hilarious situations) where rational thought is expected. We all succumb to irrationality, it’s about time we find out how it affects our daily lives in a significant way. In this astounding new book, groundbreaking in scope and totally original, Dan Ariely cuts to the heart of our strange behaviors and presents outstanding material that will keep every reader transfixed.

Predictably Irrational comes from Dr. Ariely’s work as a behavioral economist, but it’s not for economists. Well, it is, but mainly to the extent that it can help them the same way it can help anyone. If the behaviors that skew our judgments were random or senseless, we’d be hard put to sort them out and make better decisions. But research has shown that our irrationality is, in fact, systematic. People will make the same types of mistakes over and over, in a predictable manner, because the behaviors have structural origins. So recognizing them and understanding them offers us a way to do better. And that’s the aim of this book: to leave you with new knowledge of human nature, derived from a wide range of scientific experiments and findings, that will help you make better decisions in your personal life, your business life, and in the choices we all need to make about our collective welfare.

The New York Times - David Berreby

…this sly and lucid book is not about your grandfather's dismal science. Ariely's trade is behavioral economics, which is the study, by experiments, of what people actually do when they buy, sell, change jobs, marry and make other real-life decisions…[Ariely] is good-tempered company—if he mentions you in this book, you are going to be called "brilliant," "fantastic" or "delightful"—and crystal clear about all he describes. But Predictably Irrational is a far more revolutionary book than its unthreatening manner lets on. It's a concise summary of why today's social science increasingly treats the markets-know-best model as a fairy tale.

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Biography

Dan Ariely is the Alfred P. Sloan Professor of Behavioral Economics at MIT, where he holds a joint appointment between MIT's Media Laboratory and the Sloan School of Management. He is also a researcher at the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston and a visiting professor at Duke University. Ariely wrote this book while he was a fellow at the Institute for Advance Study at Princeton. His work has been featured in leading scholarly journals and a variety of popular media outlets, including the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, the Washington Post, the Boston Globe, Scientific American, and Science. Ariely has appeared on CNN and National Public Radio. He divides his time between Durham, North Carolina, Cambridge, Massachusetts, and the rest of the world.

Customer Reviews

Number of Reviews: 6
Average Rating: Customer Rating for this product is 4 out of 5
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Customer Rating for this product is 2 out of 5 Repackaging of common knowledge
A. Souers, A reviewer, 05/17/2008

“Do you know why we so often promise ourselves to diet, only to have the thought vanish when the desert cart rolls by?” This question is one of several asked by Dan Ariely in the introduction of his recent book “Predictably Irrational.” He subsequently states that “…By the end of the book, you’ll know the answers to these and many other questions that have implications for your personal life, for your business life, and for the way you look at the world.” An equally tantalizing statement follows in which the author describes how a set of events in his childhood cemented a life perspective that is quite different from 'and presumably more insightful than' your average person. Together, these preliminary contents set the tone for some high expectations. What follows, however, is a mildly interesting, sometimes trite, and often oversimplified set of observations and ‘clever’ experiments that come across more as products of extensive free time than brainchildren of a truly deep thinker. While some disappointment stems from the ambitious prologue, a rudimentary problem with Ariely’s thesis lies in the set-up. He starts early with a summarized definition of classical economics, which surmises that we are all rational and, in every day life, compute the value of all options we face and then select the one that maximizes our gain. Any action we take that is not in our best economic interest, therefore, is irrational, and as Ariely opines, surprising in its very nature. But while rational behavior of participating agents may be the basis of economic theory, very few people spend any time thinking about this theory other than economists. For the rest of us, there is no question and certainly no surprise that our social and economic behavior can be irrational, and we have countless reminders of this every day. We know that too many options can diminish returns 'chapter 8'. We also know that expectations often shape our perceptions 'chapter 9', and nobody doubts the allure of free merchandise 'chapter 3'. At the conclusion of each chapter, then, the reader is left with someone else’s reinforcing account of what he/she is already aware of. Whereas related offerings such as Tim Harford’s “Undercover Economist” or Nassim Taleb’s “Fooled by Randomness” offer technical and less-tangible insights into topics such as economics, behavior, and probability, “Predictably Irrational” relies too heavily on the concept that the author’s perspective is deeper than our own. This leads to a distillation of complex psychology 'not to mention biochemistry and evolution, among others' into oversimplified explanations and human trials involving free beer. In the end, one is left with the feeling that the author himself is much more interesting than anything uncovered by his experiments on college kids.

Also recommended: Fooled By Randomness, Fortune's Formula

Customer Rating for this product is 5 out of 5 Easy to read, Insightful...keep an open mind and just read!
ReadingPandas, someone who reads a lot, 04/18/2008

First of all, this is a fantastic book that should be read by anyone interested in money, or in market forces work. The book delves into those two subjects without ever making it sound like a textbook. Overall, I loved this book, and its experiments and ideas have indeed influenced my method of thinking about things...how I shop, how I perceive things to taste...sometimes generic bread is no different than name brand bread, sometimes we think it works better, but Dan Ariely suggests that we look at it not in terms of 'what do we think will be better' but in terms of 'what do they want you to think is better?' and take a marketing stance. better...right? Fantastic read, I urge everyone to get it and really reflect on it.

Also recommended: The Wal-Mart Effect

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